Data communications in a parallel active messaging interface of a parallel computer

ABSTRACT

Eager send data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) of a parallel computer, the PAMI composed of data communications endpoints that specify a client, a context, and a task, including receiving an eager send data communications instruction with transfer data disposed in a send buffer characterized by a read/write send buffer memory address in a read/write virtual address space of the origin endpoint; determining for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space, the read-only virtual address space shared by both the origin endpoint and the target endpoint, with all frames of physical memory mapped to pages of virtual memory in the read-only virtual address space; and communicating by the origin endpoint to the target endpoint an eager send message header that includes the read-only send buffer memory address.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a continuation application of and claims priority from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/027,421, filed on Feb. 15, 2011.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. B554331 awarded by the Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in this invention.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The field of the invention is data processing, or, more specifically, methods, apparatus, and products for data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) of a parallel computer.

2. Description of Related Art

The development of the EDVAC computer system of 1948 is often cited as the beginning of the computer era. Since that time, computer systems have evolved into extremely complicated devices. Today's computers are much more sophisticated than early systems such as the EDVAC. Computer systems typically include a combination of hardware and software components, application programs, operating systems, processors, buses, memory, input/output devices, and so on. As advances in semiconductor processing and computer architecture push the performance of the computer higher and higher, more sophisticated computer software has evolved to take advantage of the higher performance of the hardware, resulting in computer systems today that are much more powerful than just a few years ago.

Parallel computing is an area of computer technology that has experienced advances. Parallel computing is the simultaneous execution of the same application (split up and specially adapted) on multiple processors in order to obtain results faster. Parallel computing is based on the fact that the process of solving a problem usually can be divided into smaller jobs, which may be carried out simultaneously with some coordination.

Parallel computers execute parallel algorithms. A parallel algorithm can be split up to be executed a piece at a time on many different processing devices, and then put back together again at the end to get a data processing result. Some algorithms are easy to divide up into pieces. Splitting up the job of checking all of the numbers from one to a hundred thousand to see which are primes could be done, for example, by assigning a subset of the numbers to each available processor, and then putting the list of positive results back together. In this specification, the multiple processing devices that execute the individual pieces of a parallel program are referred to as ‘compute nodes.’ A parallel computer is composed of compute nodes and other processing nodes as well, including, for example, input/output (‘I/O’) nodes, and service nodes.

Parallel algorithms are valuable because it is faster to perform some kinds of large computing jobs via a parallel algorithm than it is via a serial (non-parallel) algorithm, because of the way modern processors work. It is far more difficult to construct a computer with a single fast processor than one with many slow processors with the same throughput. There are also certain theoretical limits to the potential speed of serial processors. On the other hand, every parallel algorithm has a serial part and so parallel algorithms have a saturation point. After that point adding more processors does not yield any more throughput but only increases the overhead and cost.

Parallel algorithms are designed also to optimize one more resource the data communications requirements among the nodes of a parallel computer. There are two ways parallel processors communicate, shared memory or message passing. Shared memory processing needs additional locking for the data and imposes the overhead of additional processor and bus cycles and also serializes some portion of the algorithm.

Message passing processing uses high-speed data communications networks and message buffers, but this communication adds transfer overhead on the data communications networks as well as additional memory need for message buffers and latency in the data communications among nodes. Designs of parallel computers use specially designed data communications links so that the communication overhead will be small but it is the parallel algorithm that decides the volume of the traffic.

Many data communications network architectures are used for message passing among nodes in parallel computers. Compute nodes may be organized in a network as a ‘torus’ or ‘mesh,’ for example. Also, compute nodes may be organized in a network as a tree. A torus network connects the nodes in a three-dimensional mesh with wrap around links. Every node is connected to its six neighbors through this torus network, and each node is addressed by its x,y,z coordinate in the mesh. In a tree network, the nodes typically are connected into a binary tree: each node has a parent and two children (although some nodes may only have zero children or one child, depending on the hardware configuration). In computers that use a torus and a tree network, the two networks typically are implemented independently of one another, with separate routing circuits, separate physical links, and separate message buffers.

A torus network lends itself to point to point operations, but a tree network typically is inefficient in point to point communication. A tree network, however, does provide high bandwidth and low latency for certain collective operations, message passing operations where all compute nodes participate simultaneously, such as, for example, an allgather.

There is at this time a general trend in computer processor development to move from multi-core to many-core processors: from dual-, tri-, quad-, hexa-, octo-core chips to ones with tens or even hundreds of cores. In addition, multi-core chips mixed with simultaneous multithreading, memory-on-chip, and special-purpose heterogeneous cores promise further performance and efficiency gains, especially in processing multimedia, recognition and networking applications. This trend is impacting the supercomputing world as well, where large transistor count chips are more efficiently used by replicating cores, rather than building chips that are very fast but very inefficient in terms of power utilization.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Methods, parallel computers, and computer program products for eager send data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) of a parallel computer, the parallel computer including a plurality of compute nodes that execute a parallel application, the PAMI composed of data communications endpoints, each endpoint including a specification of data communications parameters for a thread of execution on a compute node, including specifications of a client, a context, and a task, the compute nodes and the endpoints coupled for data communications through the PAMI and through data communications resources, including receiving in an origin endpoint of the PAMI an eager send data communications instruction that specifies a transmission of transfer data from the origin endpoint to a target endpoint, the transfer data disposed in a send buffer, the send buffer characterized by a read/write send buffer memory address in a read/write virtual address space of the origin endpoint; determining by the origin endpoint for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space, the read-only virtual address space shared by both the origin endpoint and the target endpoint, the read-only virtual address space non-overlapping with respect to the read/write virtual address space, the read-only virtual address space established by an operating system of the parallel computer with all frames of physical memory mapped to pages of virtual memory in the read-only virtual address space; and communicating by the origin endpoint to the target endpoint an eager send message header that includes the read-only send buffer memory address.

The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following more particular descriptions of example embodiments of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings wherein like reference numbers generally represent like parts of example embodiments of the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 sets forth a block and network diagram of an example parallel computer that processes data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 2 sets forth a block diagram of an example compute node for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 3A illustrates an example Point To Point Adapter for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 3B illustrates an example Collective Operations Adapter for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 4 illustrates an example data communications network optimized for point to point operations for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 5 illustrates an example data communications network optimized for collective operations by organizing compute nodes in a tree for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 6 sets forth a block diagram of an example protocol stack for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 7 sets forth a functional block diagram of an example PAMI for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 8A sets forth a functional block diagram of example data communications resources for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 8B sets forth a functional block diagram of an example DMA controller—in an architecture where the DMA controller is the only DMA controller on a compute node—and an origin endpoint and its target endpoint are both located on the same compute node.

FIG. 9 sets forth a functional block diagram of an example PAMI for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 10 sets forth a functional block diagram of example endpoints for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 11 sets forth a flow chart illustrating an example method of eager send data communications through shared read-only memory in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 12 sets forth a block diagram of example computer memory configured for eager send data communications through shared read-only memory in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention.

FIG. 13 illustrates an example page table for use in parallel computers that implement eager send data communications through shared read-only memory in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS

Example methods, computers, and computer program products for data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, beginning with FIG. 1. FIG. 1 sets forth a block and network diagram of an example parallel computer (100) that processes data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. The parallel computer (100) in the example of FIG. 1 is coupled to non-volatile memory for the computer in the form of data storage device (118), an output device for the computer in the form of printer (120), and an input/output device for the computer in the form of computer terminal (122). The parallel computer (100) in the example of FIG. 1 includes a plurality of compute nodes (102).

The parallel computer (100) in the example of FIG. 1 includes a plurality of compute nodes (102). The compute nodes (102) are coupled for data communications by several independent data communications networks including a high speed Ethernet network (174), a Joint Test Action Group (‘JTAG’) network (104), a tree network (106) which is optimized for collective operations, and a torus network (108) which is optimized point to point operations. Tree network (106) is a data communications network that includes data communications links connected to the compute nodes so as to organize the compute nodes as a tree. Each data communications network is implemented with data communications links among the compute nodes (102). The data communications links provide data communications for parallel operations among the compute nodes of the parallel computer.

In addition, the compute nodes (102) of parallel computer are organized into at least one operational group (132) of compute nodes for collective parallel operations on parallel computer (100). An operational group of compute nodes is the set of compute nodes upon which a collective parallel operation executes. Collective operations are implemented with data communications among the compute nodes of an operational group. Collective operations are those functions that involve all the compute nodes of an operational group. A collective operation is an operation, a message-passing computer program instruction that is executed simultaneously, that is, at approximately the same time, by all the compute nodes in an operational group of compute nodes. Such an operational group may include all the compute nodes in a parallel computer (100) or a subset all the compute nodes. Collective operations are often built around point to point operations. A collective operation requires that all processes on all compute nodes within an operational group call the same collective operation with matching arguments. A ‘broadcast’ is an example of a collective operations for moving data among compute nodes of an operational group. A ‘reduce’ operation is an example of a collective operation that executes arithmetic or logical functions on data distributed among the compute nodes of an operational group. An operational group may be implemented as, for example, an MPI ‘communicator.’

‘MPI’ refers to ‘Message Passing Interface,’ a prior art applications messaging module or parallel communications library, an application-level messaging module of computer program instructions for data communications on parallel computers. Such an application messaging module is disposed in an application messaging layer in a data communications protocol stack. Examples of prior-art parallel communications libraries that may be improved for use with parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention include IBM's MPI library, the ‘Parallel Virtual Machine’ (‘PVM’) library, MPICH, OpenMPI, and LAM/MPI. MPI is promulgated by the MPI Forum, an open group with representatives from many organizations that define and maintain the MPI standard. MPI at the time of this writing is a de facto standard for communication among compute nodes running a parallel program on a distributed memory parallel computer. This specification sometimes uses MPI terminology for ease of explanation, although the use of MPI as such is not a requirement or limitation of the present invention.

Most collective operations are variations or combinations of four basic operations: broadcast, gather, scatter, and reduce. In a broadcast operation, all processes specify the same root process, whose buffer contents will be sent. Processes other than the root specify receive buffers. After the operation, all buffers contain the message from the root process.

A scatter operation, like the broadcast operation, is also a one-to-many collective operation. All processes specify the same receive count. The send arguments are only significant to the root process, whose buffer actually contains sendcount * N elements of a given datatype, where N is the number of processes in the given group of compute nodes. The send buffer will be divided equally and dispersed from the root to all processes (including the root). Each process is assigned a sequential identifier termed a ‘rank.’ After the operation, the root has sent sendcount data elements to each process in increasing rank order. Rank 0 (the root process) receives the first sendcount data elements from the send buffer. Rank 1 receives the second sendcount data elements from the send buffer, and so on.

A gather operation is a many-to-one collective operation that is a complete reverse of the description of the scatter operation. That is, a gather is a many-to-one collective operation in which elements of a datatype are gathered from the ranked processes into a receive buffer of the root process.

A reduce operation is also a many-to-one collective operation that includes an arithmetic or logical function performed on two data elements. All processes specify the same ‘count’ and the same arithmetic or logical function. After the reduction, all processes have sent count data elements from computer node send buffers to the root process. In a reduction operation, data elements from corresponding send buffer locations are combined pair-wise by arithmetic or logical operations to yield a single corresponding element in the root process's receive buffer. Application specific reduction operations can be defined at runtime. Parallel communications libraries may support predefined operations. MPI, for example, provides the following pre-defined reduction operations:

-   -   MPI_MAX maximum     -   MPI_MIN minimum     -   MPI_SUM sum     -   MPI_PROD product     -   MPI_LAND logical AND     -   MPI_BAND bitwise AND     -   MPI_LOR logical OR     -   MPI_BOR bitwise OR     -   MPI_LXOR logical exclusive OR     -   MPI_BXOR bitwise exclusive OR

In addition to compute nodes, the example parallel computer (100) includes input/output (‘I/O’) nodes (110, 114) coupled to compute nodes (102) through one of the data communications networks (174). The I/O nodes (110, 114) provide I/O services between compute nodes (102) and I/O devices (118, 120, 122). I/O nodes (110, 114) are connected for data communications I/O devices (118, 120, 122) through local area network (‘LAN’) (130). Computer (100) also includes a service node (116) coupled to the compute nodes through one of the networks (104). Service node (116) provides service common to pluralities of compute nodes, loading programs into the compute nodes, starting program execution on the compute nodes, retrieving results of program operations on the computer nodes, and so on. Service node (116) runs a service application (124) and communicates with users (128) through a service application interface (126) that runs on computer terminal (122).

As the term is used here, a parallel active messaging interface or ‘PAMI’ (218) is a system-level messaging layer in a protocol stack of a parallel computer that is composed of data communications endpoints each of which is specified with data communications parameters for a thread of execution on a compute node of the parallel computer. The PAMI is a ‘parallel’ interface in that many instances of the PAMI operate in parallel on the compute nodes of a parallel computer. The PAMI is an ‘active messaging interface’ in that data communications messages in the PAMI are active messages, ‘active’ in the sense that such messages implement callback functions to advise of message dispatch and instruction completion and so on, thereby reducing the quantity of acknowledgment traffic, and the like, burdening the data communication resources of the PAMI.

Each data communications endpoint of a PAMI is implemented as a combination of a client, a context, and a task. A ‘client’ as the term is used in PAMI operations is a collection of data communications resources dedicated to the exclusive use of an application-level data processing entity, an application or an application messaging module such as an MPI library. A ‘context’ as the term is used in PAMI operations is composed of a subset of a client's collection of data processing resources, context functions, and a work queue of data transfer instructions to be performed by use of the subset through the context functions operated by an assigned thread of execution. In at least some embodiments, the context's subset of a client's data processing resources is dedicated to the exclusive use of the context. A ‘task’ as the term is used in PAMI operations refers to a canonical entity, an integer or objection oriented programming object that represents in a PAMI a process of execution of the parallel application. That is, a task is typically implemented as an identifier of a particular instance of an application executing on a compute node, a compute core on a compute node, or a thread of execution on a multi-threading compute core on a compute node.

In the example of FIG. 1, the compute nodes (102), as well as PAMI endpoints on the compute nodes, are coupled for data communications through the PAMI (218) and through data communications resources such as collective network (106) and point-to-point network (108). The processing of data communications by the parallel computer of FIG. 1 is further explained with reference to an origin endpoint (352) and a target endpoint (354). The parallel computer of FIG. 1 operates generally to carry out data communications in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention by receiving in an origin endpoint (352) of the PAMI (218) a data communications instruction (390), where the instruction is characterized by an instruction type, and the instruction specifies a transmission of transfer data (384) from the origin endpoint (382) to the target endpoint (354). The transfer data is disposed in a send buffer (376), and the send buffer is characterized by a read/write (‘R/W’) send buffer memory address in a R/W virtual address space (602) of the origin endpoint (352).

The parallel computer includes two other extents of computer memory, a physical memory (604) that at (626) provides the physical storage of the send buffer, and a read-only (‘R/O’) virtual address space (606) where, at reference (608), the send buffer is shared with all the endpoints presently operating on the parallel computer.

The R/O virtual address space (608) is non-overlapping with respect to the R/O virtual address space; no memory addresses within the R/O virtual address space (608) occur in any R/W virtual address space (602). The R/O virtual address space (608) is established by an operating system of the parallel computer with all frames of physical memory (604) mapped to pages of virtual memory in the read-only virtual address space (608).

The parallel computer, having received in the origin endpoint (352) the data communications instruction (390), here characterized as an ‘eager send’ (382) data communications instruction, further functions generally by determining by the origin endpoint (352) for the send buffer (376) a R/O send buffer memory address in the R/O virtual address space (606) and communicating to the target endpoint (354) an eager send message header (374) that includes the read-only send buffer memory address. The target endpoint (354), having as it does full R/O access to all physical memory through the mapped frames of the R/O virtual address space (608), gains immediate access to the transfer data as soon as it receives the R/O send buffer memory address in the R/O virtual address space (606).

Examples of instruction types include SEND instructions for data transfers through networks, PUT instructions for data transfers through DMA, GET instructions for data transfer through segments of shared memory, and others. Data communications instructions processed by the parallel computer here can include both eager data communications instructions, receive instructions, DMA PUT instructions, DMA GET instructions, and so on. Some data communications instructions, typically GETs and PUTs are one-sided DMA instructions in that there is no cooperation required from a target processor, no computation on the target side to complete such a PUT or GET because data is transferred directly to or from memory on the other side of the transfer. In this setting, the term ‘target’ is used for either PUT or GET. A PUT target receives data directly into its RAM from an origin endpoint. A GET target provides data directly from its RAM to the origin endpoint. Thus readers will recognize that the designation of an endpoint as an origin endpoint for a transfer is a designation of the endpoint that initiates execution of a DMA transfer instruction—rather than a designation of the direction of the transfer: PUT instructions transfer data from an origin endpoint to a target endpoint. GET instructions transfer data from a target endpoint to an origin endpoint.

In any particular communication of data, an origin endpoint and a target endpoint can be any two endpoints on any of the compute nodes (102), on different compute nodes, or two endpoints on the same compute node. A sequence of data communications instructions resides in a work queue of a context and results in data transfers between two endpoints, an origin endpoint and a target endpoint. Data communications instructions are ‘active’ in the sense that the instructions implement callback functions to advise of and implement instruction dispatch and instruction completion, thereby reducing the quantity of acknowledgment traffic required on the network. Each such data communication instruction effects a data transfer, from an origin endpoint to a target endpoint, through some form of data communications resources, networks, shared memory segments, network adapters, DMA controllers, and the like.

The arrangement of compute nodes, networks, and I/O devices making up the example parallel computer illustrated in FIG. 1 are for explanation only, not for limitation of the present invention. Parallel computers capable of data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention may include additional nodes, networks, devices, and architectures, not shown in FIG. 1, as will occur to those of skill in the art. For ease of explanation, the parallel computer in the example of FIG. 1 is illustrated with only one origin endpoint (352), and one target endpoint (354); readers will recognize, however, that practical embodiments of such a parallel computer will include many origin endpoints and many target endpoints. The parallel computer (100) in the example of FIG. 1 includes sixteen compute nodes (102); parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to some embodiments of the present invention include thousands of compute nodes. In addition to Ethernet and JTAG, networks in such data processing systems may support many data communications protocols including for example TCP (Transmission Control Protocol), IP (Internet Protocol), and others as will occur to those of skill in the art. Various embodiments of the present invention may be implemented on a variety of hardware platforms in addition to those illustrated in FIG. 1.

Data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention is generally implemented on a parallel computer that includes a plurality of compute nodes. In fact, such computers may include thousands of such compute nodes, with a compute node typically executing at least one instance of a parallel application. Each compute node is in turn itself a computer composed of one or more computer processors, its own computer memory, and its own input/output (‘I/O’) adapters. For further explanation, therefore, FIG. 2 sets forth a block diagram of an example compute node (152) for use in a parallel computer that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. The compute node (152) of FIG. 2 includes one or more computer processors (164) as well as random access memory (‘RAM’) (156). Each processor (164) can support multiple hardware compute cores (165), and each such core can in turn support multiple threads of execution, hardware threads of execution as well as software threads. Each processor (164) is connected to RAM (156) through a high-speed front side bus (161), bus adapter (194), and a high-speed memory bus (154)—and through bus adapter (194) and an extension bus (168) to other components of the compute node. Stored in RAM (156) is an application program (158), a module of computer program instructions that carries out parallel, user-level data processing using parallel algorithms.

Also stored RAM (156) is an application messaging module (216), a library of computer program instructions that carry out application-level parallel communications among compute nodes, including point to point operations as well as collective operations. Although the application program can call PAMI routines directly, the application program (158) often executes point-to-point data communications operations by calling software routines in the application messaging module (216), which in turn is improved according to embodiments of the present invention to use PAMI functions to implement such communications. An application messaging module can be developed from scratch to use a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention, using a traditional programming language such as the C programming language or C++, for example, and using traditional programming methods to write parallel communications routines that send and receive data among PAMI endpoints and compute nodes through data communications networks or shared-memory transfers. In this approach, the application messaging module (216) exposes a traditional interface, such as MPI, to the application program (158) so that the application program can gain the benefits of a PAMI with no need to recode the application. As an alternative to coding from scratch, therefore, existing prior art application messaging modules may be improved to use the PAMI, existing modules that already implement a traditional interface. Examples of prior-art application messaging modules that can be improved to process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention include such parallel communications libraries as the traditional ‘Message Passing Interface’ (‘MPI’) library, the ‘Parallel Virtual Machine’ (‘PVM’) library, MPICH, and the like.

Also represented in RAM in the example of FIG. 2 is a PAMI (218). Readers will recognize, however, that the representation of the PAMI in RAM is a convention for ease of explanation rather than a limitation of the present invention, because the PAMI and its components, endpoints, clients, contexts, and so on, have particular associations with and inclusions of hardware data communications resources. In fact, the PAMI can be implemented partly as software or firmware and hardware—or even, at least in some embodiments, entirely in hardware.

Also represented in RAM (156) in the example of FIG. 2 is a segment (227) of shared memory. In typical operation, the operating system (162) in this example compute node assigns portions of address space to each processor (164), and, to the extent that the processors include multiple compute cores (165), treats each compute core as a separate processor with its own assignment of a portion of core memory or RAM (156) for a separate heap, stack, memory variable storage, and so on. The default architecture for such apportionment of memory space is that each processor or compute core operates its assigned portion of memory separately, with no ability to access memory assigned to another processor or compute core. Upon request, however, the operating system grants to one processor or compute core the ability to access a segment of memory that is assigned to another processor or compute core, and such a segment is referred to in this specification as a ‘segment of shared memory.’

In the example of FIG. 2, each processor or compute core has uniform access to the RAM (156) on the compute node, so that accessing a segment of shared memory is equally fast regardless where the shared segment is located in physical memory. In some embodiments, however, modules of physical memory are dedicated to particular processors, so that a processor may access local memory quickly and remote memory more slowly, a configuration referred to as a Non-Uniform Memory Access or ‘NUMA.’ In such embodiments, a segment of shared memory can be configured locally for one endpoint and remotely for another endpoint—or remotely from both endpoints of a communication. From the perspective of an origin endpoint transmitting data through a segment of shared memory that is configured remotely with respect to the origin endpoint, transmitting data through the segment of shared memory will appear slower that if the segment of shared memory were configured locally with respect to the origin endpoint—or if the segment were local to both the origin endpoint and the target endpoint. This is the effect of the architecture represented by the compute node (152) in the example of FIG. 2 with all processors and all compute cores coupled through the same bus to the RAM—that all accesses to segments of memory shared among processes or processors on the compute node are local—and therefore very fast.

Also stored in RAM (156) in the example compute node of FIG. 2 is an operating system (162), a module of computer program instructions and routines for an application program's access to other resources of the compute node. It is possible, in some embodiments at least, for an application program, an application messaging module, and a PAMI in a compute node of a parallel computer to run threads of execution with no user login and no security issues because each such thread is entitled to complete access to all resources of the node. The quantity and complexity of duties to be performed by an operating system on a compute node in a parallel computer therefore can be somewhat smaller and less complex than those of an operating system on a serial computer with many threads running simultaneously with various level of authorization for access to resources. In addition, there is no video I/O on the compute node (152) of FIG. 2, another factor that decreases the demands on the operating system. The operating system may therefore be quite lightweight by comparison with operating systems of general purpose computers, a pared down or ‘lightweight’ version as it were, or an operating system developed specifically for operations on a particular parallel computer. Operating systems that may be improved or simplified for use in a compute node according to embodiments of the present invention include UNIX™, Linux™, Microsoft XP™, AIX™, IBM's i5/OS™, and others as will occur to those of skill in the art.

The example compute node (152) of FIG. 2 includes several communications adapters (172, 176, 180, 188) for implementing data communications with other nodes of a parallel computer. Such data communications may be carried out serially through RS-232 connections, through external buses such as USB, through data communications networks such as IP networks, and in other ways as will occur to those of skill in the art. Communications adapters implement the hardware level of data communications through which one computer sends data communications to another computer, directly or through a network. Examples of communications adapters for use in computers that process data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) according to embodiments of the present invention include modems for wired communications, Ethernet (IEEE 802.3) adapters for wired network communications, and 802.11b adapters for wireless network communications.

The data communications adapters in the example of FIG. 2 include a Gigabit Ethernet adapter (172) that couples example compute node (152) for data communications to a Gigabit Ethernet (174). Gigabit Ethernet is a network transmission standard, defined in the IEEE 802.3 standard, that provides a data rate of 1 billion bits per second (one gigabit). Gigabit Ethernet is a variant of Ethernet that operates over multimode fiber optic cable, single mode fiber optic cable, or unshielded twisted pair.

The data communications adapters in the example of FIG. 2 includes a JTAG Slave circuit (176) that couples example compute node (152) for data communications to a JTAG Master circuit (178). JTAG is the usual name for the IEEE 1149.1 standard entitled Standard Test Access Port and Boundary-Scan Architecture for test access ports used for testing printed circuit boards using boundary scan. JTAG is so widely adapted that, at this time, boundary scan is more or less synonymous with JTAG. JTAG is used not only for printed circuit boards, but also for conducting boundary scans of integrated circuits, and is also used as a mechanism for debugging embedded systems, providing a convenient “back door” into the system. The example compute node of FIG. 2 may be all three of these: It typically includes one or more integrated circuits installed on a printed circuit board and may be implemented as an embedded system having its own processor, its own memory, and its own I/O capability. JTAG boundary scans through JTAG Slave (176) may efficiently configure processor registers and memory in compute node (152) for use in data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention.

The data communications adapters in the example of FIG. 2 includes a Point To Point Adapter (180) that couples example compute node (152) for data communications to a data communications network (108) that is optimal for point to point message passing operations such as, for example, a network configured as a three-dimensional torus or mesh. Point To Point Adapter (180) provides data communications in six directions on three communications axes, x, y, and z, through six bidirectional links: +x (181), −x (182), +y (183), −y (184), +z (185), and −z (186).

For ease of explanation, the Point To Point Adapter (180) of FIG. 2 as illustrated is configured for data communications in three dimensions, x, y, and z, but readers will recognize that Point To Point Adapters optimized for point-to-point operations in data communications in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention may in fact be implemented so as to support communications in two dimensions, four dimensions, five dimensions, and so on.

The data communications adapters in the example of FIG. 2 includes a Collective Operations Adapter (188) that couples example compute node (152) for data communications to a network (106) that is optimal for collective message passing operations such as, for example, a network configured as a binary tree. Collective Operations Adapter (188) provides data communications through three bidirectional links: two to children nodes (190) and one to a parent node (192).

The example compute node (152) includes a number of arithmetic logic units (‘ALUs’). ALUs (166) are components of processors (164), and a separate ALU (170) is dedicated to the exclusive use of collective operations adapter (188) for use in performing the arithmetic and logical functions of reduction operations. Computer program instructions of a reduction routine in an application messaging module (216) or a PAMI (218) may latch an instruction for an arithmetic or logical function into instruction register (169). When the arithmetic or logical function of a reduction operation is a ‘sum’ or a ‘logical OR,’ for example, collective operations adapter (188) may execute the arithmetic or logical operation by use of an ALU (166) in a processor (164) or, typically much faster, by use of the dedicated ALU (170).

The example compute node (152) of FIG. 2 includes a direct memory access (‘DMA’) controller (225), a module of automated computing machinery that implements, through communications with other DMA engines on other compute nodes, or on a same compute node, direct memory access to and from memory on its own compute node as well as memory on other compute nodes. Direct memory access is a way of reading and writing to and from memory of compute nodes with reduced operational burden on computer processors (164); a CPU initiates a DMA transfer, but the CPU does not execute the DMA transfer. A DMA transfer essentially copies a block of memory from one compute node to another, or between RAM segments of applications on the same compute node, from an origin to a target for a PUT operation, from a target to an origin for a GET operation.

For further explanation, FIG. 3A illustrates an example of a Point To Point Adapter (180) useful in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. Point To Point Adapter (180) is designed for use in a data communications network optimized for point to point operations, a network that organizes compute nodes in a three-dimensional torus or mesh. Point To Point Adapter (180) in the example of FIG. 3A provides data communication along an x-axis through four unidirectional data communications links, to and from the next node in the −x direction (182) and to and from the next node in the +x direction (181). Point To Point Adapter (180) also provides data communication along a y-axis through four unidirectional data communications links, to and from the next node in the −y direction (184) and to and from the next node in the +y direction (183). Point To Point Adapter (180) in also provides data communication along a z-axis through four unidirectional data communications links, to and from the next node in the −z direction (186) and to and from the next node in the +z direction (185). For ease of explanation, the Point To Point Adapter (180) of FIG. 3A as illustrated is configured for data communications in only three dimensions, x, y, and z, but readers will recognize that Point To Point Adapters optimized for point-to-point operations in a parallel computer that processes data communications according to embodiments of the present invention may in fact be implemented so as to support communications in two dimensions, four dimensions, five dimensions, and so on. Several supercomputers now use five dimensional mesh or torus networks, including, for example, IBM's Blue Gene Q™.

For further explanation, FIG. 3B illustrates an example of a Collective Operations Adapter (188) useful in a parallel computer that processes data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. Collective Operations Adapter (188) is designed for use in a network optimized for collective operations, a network that organizes compute nodes of a parallel computer in a binary tree. Collective Operations Adapter (188) in the example of FIG. 3B provides data communication to and from two children nodes through four unidirectional data communications links (190). Collective Operations Adapter (188) also provides data communication to and from a parent node through two unidirectional data communications links (192).

For further explanation, FIG. 4 sets forth a line drawing illustrating an example data communications network (108) optimized for point-to-point operations useful in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. In the example of FIG. 4, dots represent compute nodes (102) of a parallel computer, and the dotted lines between the dots represent data communications links (103) between compute nodes. The data communications links are implemented with point-to-point data communications adapters similar to the one illustrated for example in FIG. 3A, with data communications links on three axis, x, y, and z, and to and fro in six directions +x (181), −x (182), +y (183), −y (184), +z (185), and −z (186). The links and compute nodes are organized by this data communications network optimized for point-to-point operations into a three dimensional mesh (105). The mesh (105) has wrap-around links on each axis that connect the outermost compute nodes in the mesh (105) on opposite sides of the mesh (105). These wrap-around links form a torus (107). Each compute node in the torus has a location in the torus that is uniquely specified by a set of x, y, z coordinates. Readers will note that the wrap-around links in the y and z directions have been omitted for clarity, but are configured in a similar manner to the wrap-around link illustrated in the x direction. For clarity of explanation, the data communications network of FIG. 4 is illustrated with only 27 compute nodes, but readers will recognize that a data communications network optimized for point-to-point operations in a parallel computer that processes data communications according to embodiments of the present invention may contain only a few compute nodes or may contain thousands of compute nodes. For ease of explanation, the data communications network of FIG. 4 is illustrated with only three dimensions: x, y, and z, but readers will recognize that a data communications network optimized for point-to-point operations may in fact be implemented in two dimensions, four dimensions, five dimensions, and so on. As mentioned, several supercomputers now use five dimensional mesh or torus networks, including IBM's Blue Gene Q™.

For further explanation, FIG. 5 illustrates an example data communications network (106) optimized for collective operations by organizing compute nodes in a tree. The example data communications network of FIG. 5 includes data communications links connected to the compute nodes so as to organize the compute nodes as a tree. In the example of FIG. 5, dots represent compute nodes (102) of a parallel computer, and the dotted lines (103) between the dots represent data communications links between compute nodes. The data communications links are implemented with collective operations data communications adapters similar to the one illustrated for example in FIG. 3B, with each node typically providing data communications to and from two children nodes and data communications to and from a parent node, with some exceptions. Nodes in a binary tree may be characterized as a root node (202), branch nodes (204), and leaf nodes (206). The root node (202) has two children but no parent. The leaf nodes (206) each has a parent, but leaf nodes have no children. The branch nodes (204) each has both a parent and two children. The links and compute nodes are thereby organized by this data communications network optimized for collective operations into a binary tree (106). For clarity of explanation, the data communications network of FIG. 5 is illustrated with only 31 compute nodes, but readers will recognize that a data communications network optimized for collective operations for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention may contain only a few compute nodes or hundreds or thousands of compute nodes.

In the example of FIG. 5, each node in the tree is assigned a unit identifier referred to as a ‘rank’ (250). The rank actually identifies an instance of a parallel application that is executing on a compute node. That is, the rank is an application-level identifier. Using the rank to identify a node assumes that only one such instance of an application is executing on each node. A compute node can, however, support multiple processors, each of which can support multiple processing cores—so that more than one process or instance of an application can easily be present under execution on any given compute node—or in all the compute nodes, for that matter. To the extent that more than one instance of an application executes on a single compute node, the rank identifies the instance of the application as such rather than the compute node. A rank uniquely identifies an application's location in the tree network for use in both point-to-point and collective operations in the tree network. The ranks in this example are assigned as integers beginning with ‘0’ assigned to the root instance or root node (202), ‘1’ assigned to the first node in the second layer of the tree, ‘2’ assigned to the second node in the second layer of the tree, ‘3’ assigned to the first node in the third layer of the tree, ‘4’ assigned to the second node in the third layer of the tree, and so on. For ease of illustration, only the ranks of the first three layers of the tree are shown here, but all compute nodes, or rather all application instances, in the tree network are assigned a unique rank. Such rank values can also be assigned as identifiers of application instances as organized in a mesh or torus network.

For further explanation, FIG. 6 sets forth a block diagram of an example protocol stack useful in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. The example protocol stack of FIG. 6 includes a hardware layer (214), a system messaging layer (212), an application messaging layer (210), and an application layer (208). For ease of explanation, the protocol layers in the example stack of FIG. 6 are shown connecting an origin compute node (222) and a target compute node (224), although it is worthwhile to point out that in embodiments that effect DMA data transfers, the origin compute node and the target compute node can be the same compute node.

The granularity of connection through the system messaging layer (212), which is implemented with a PAMI (218), is finer than merely compute node to compute node—because, again, communications among endpoints often is communications among endpoints on the same compute node. For further explanation, recall that the PAMI (218) connects endpoints, connections specified by combinations of clients, contexts, and tasks, each such combination being specific to a thread of execution on a compute node, with each compute node capable of supporting many threads and therefore many endpoints. Every endpoint typically can function as both an origin endpoint and a target endpoint for data transfers through a PAMI, and both the origin endpoint and its target endpoint can be located on the same compute node. So an origin compute node (222) and its target compute node (224) can in fact, and often will, be the same compute node.

The application layer (208) provides communications among instances of a parallel application (158) running on the compute nodes (222, 224) by invoking functions in an application messaging module (216) installed on each compute node. Communications among instances of the application through messages passed between the instances of the application. Applications may communicate messages invoking function of an application programming interface (‘API’) exposed by the application messaging module (216). In this approach, the application messaging module (216) exposes a traditional interface, such as an API of an MPI library, to the application program (158) so that the application program can gain the benefits of a PAMI, reduced network traffic, callback functions, and so on, with no need to recode the application. Alternatively, if the parallel application is programmed to use PAMI functions, the application can call the PAMI functions directly, without going through the application messaging module.

The example protocol stack of FIG. 6 includes a system messaging layer (212) implemented here as a PAMI (218). The PAMI provides system-level data communications functions that support messaging in the application layer (602) and the application messaging layer (610). Such system-level functions are typically invoked through an API exposed to the application messaging modules (216) in the application messaging layer (210). Although developers can in fact access a PAMI API directly by coding an application to do so, a PAMI's system-level functions in the system messaging layer (212) in many embodiments are isolated from the application layer (208) by the application messaging layer (210), making the application layer somewhat independent of system specific details. With an application messaging module presenting a standard MPI API to an application, for example, with the application messaging module retooled to use the PAMI to carry out the low-level messaging functions, the application gains the benefits of a PAMI with no need to incur the expense of reprogramming the application to call the PAMI directly. Because, however, some applications will in fact be reprogrammed to call the PAMI directly, all entities in the protocol stack above the PAMI are viewed by PAMI as applications. When PAMI functions are invoked by entities above the PAMI in the stack, the PAMI makes no distinction whether the caller is in the application layer or the application messaging layer, no distinction whether the caller is an application as such or an MPI library function invoked by an application. As far as the PAMI is concerned, any caller of a PAMI function is an application.

The protocol stack of FIG. 6 includes a hardware layer (634) that defines the physical implementation and the electrical implementation of aspects of the hardware on the compute nodes such as the bus, network cabling, connector types, physical data rates, data transmission encoding and many other factors for communications between the compute nodes (222) on the physical network medium. In parallel computers that process data communications with DMA controllers according to embodiments of the present invention, the hardware layer includes DMA controllers and network links, including routers, packet switches, and the like.

For further explanation, FIG. 7 sets forth a functional block diagram of an example PAMI (218) for use in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. The PAMI (218) provides an active messaging layer that supports both point to point communications in a mesh or torus as well as collective operations, gathers, reductions, barriers, and the like in tree networks, for example. The PAMI is a multithreaded parallel communications engine designed to provide low level message passing functions, many of which are one-sided, and abstract such functions for higher level messaging middleware, referred to in this specification as ‘application messaging modules’ in an application messaging layer. In the example of FIG. 7, the application messaging layer is represented by a generic MPI module (258), appropriate for ease of explanation because some form of MPI is a de facto standard for such messaging middleware. Compute nodes and communications endpoints of a parallel computer (102 on FIG. 1) are coupled for data communications through such a PAMI and through data communications resources (294, 296, 314) that include DMA controllers, network adapters, and data communications networks through which controllers and adapters deliver data communications. The PAMI (218) provides data communications among data communications endpoints, where each endpoint is specified by data communications parameters for a thread of execution on a compute node, including specifications of a client, a context, and a task.

The PAMI (218) in this example includes PAMI clients (302, 304), tasks (286, 298), contexts (190, 292, 310, 312), and endpoints (288, 300). A PAMI client is a collection of data communications resources (294, 295, 314) dedicated to the exclusive use of an application-level data processing entity, an application or an application messaging module such as an MPI library. Data communications resources assigned in collections to PAMI clients are explained in more detail below with reference to FIGS. 8A and 8B. PAMI clients (203, 304 on FIG. 7) enable higher level middleware, application messaging modules, MPI libraries, and the like, to be developed independently so that each can be used concurrently by an application. Although the application messaging layer in FIG. 7 is represented for example by a single generic MPI module (258), in fact, a PAMI, operating multiple clients, can support multiple message passing libraries or application messaging modules simultaneously, a fact that is explained in more detail with reference to FIG. 9. FIG. 9 sets forth a functional block diagram of an example PAMI (218) useful in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention in which the example PAMI operates, on behalf of an application (158), with multiple application messaging modules (502-510) simultaneously. The application (158) can have multiple messages in transit simultaneously through each of the application messaging modules (502-510). Each context (512-520) carries out, through post and advance functions, data communications for the application on data communications resources in the exclusive possession, in each client, of that context. Each context carries out data communications operations independently and in parallel with other contexts in the same or other clients. In the example FIG. 9, each client (532-540) includes a collection of data communications resources (522-530) dedicated to the exclusive use of an application-level data processing entity, one of the application messaging modules (502-510):

-   -   IBM MPI Library (502) operates through context (512) data         communications resources (522) dedicated to the use of PAMI         client (532),     -   MPICH Library (504) operates through context (514) data         communications resources (524) dedicated to the use of PAMI         client (534),     -   Unified Parallel C (‘UPC’) Library (506) operates through         context (516) data communications resources (526) dedicated to         the use of PAMI client (536),     -   Partitioned Global Access Space (‘PGAS’) Runtime Library (508)         operates through context (518) data communications resources         (528) dedicated to the use of PAMI client (538), and     -   Aggregate Remote Memory Copy Interface (‘ARMCI’) Library (510)         operates through context (520) data communications resources         (530) dedicated to the use of PAMI client (540).

Again referring to the example of FIG. 7: The PAMI (218) includes tasks, listed in task lists (286, 298) and identified (250) to the application (158). A ‘task’ as the term is used in PAMI operations is a platform-defined integer datatype that identifies a canonical application process, an instance of a parallel application (158). Very carefully in this specification, the term ‘task’ is always used to refer only to this PAMI structure, not the traditional use of the computer term ‘task’ to refer to a process or thread of execution. In this specification, the term ‘process’ refers to a canonical data processing process, a container for threads in a multithreading environment. In particular in the example of FIG. 7, the application (158) is implemented as a canonical process with multiple threads (251-254) assigned various duties by a leading thread (251) which itself executes an instance of a parallel application program. Each instance of a parallel application is assigned a task; each task so assigned can be an integer value, for example, in a C environment, or a separate task object in a C++ or Java environment. The tasks are components of communications endpoints, but are not themselves communications endpoints; tasks are not addressed directly for data communications in PAMI. This gives a finer grained control than was available in prior message passing art. Each client has its own list (286, 298) of tasks for which its contexts provide services; this allows each process to potentially reside simultaneously in two or more different communications domains as will be the case in certain advanced computers using, for example, one type of processor and network in one domain and a completely different processor type and network in another domain, all in the same computer.

The PAMI (218) includes contexts (290, 292, 310, 312). A ‘context’ as the term is used in PAMI operations is composed of a subset of a client's collection of data processing resources, context functions, and a work queue of data transfer instructions to be performed by use of the subset through the context functions operated by an assigned thread of execution. That is, a context represents a partition of the local data communications resources assigned to a PAMI client. Every context within a client has equivalent functionality and semantics. Context functions implement contexts as threading points that applications use to optimize concurrent communications. Communications initiated by a local process, an instance of a parallel application, uses a context object to identify the specific threading point that will be used to issue a particular communication independent of communications occurring in other contexts. In the example of FIG. 7, where the application (158) and the application messaging module (258) are both implemented as canonical processes with multiple threads of execution, each has assigned or mapped particular threads (253, 254, 262, 264) to advance (268, 270, 276, 278) work on the contexts (290, 292, 310, 312), including execution of local callbacks (272, 280). In particular, the local event callback functions (272, 280) associated with any particular communication are invoked by the thread advancing the context that was used to initiate the communication operation in the first place. Like PAMI tasks, contexts are not used to directly address a communication destination or target, as they are a local resource.

Context functions, explained here with regard to references (472-482) on FIG. 9, include functions to create (472) and destroy (474) contexts, functions to lock (476) and unlock (478) access to a context, and functions to post (480) and advance (480) work in a context. For ease of explanation, the context functions (472-482) are illustrated in only one expanded context (512); readers will understand, however, that all PAMI contexts have similar context functions. The create (472) and destroy (474) functions are, in an object-oriented sense, constructors and destructors. In the example embodiments described in this specifications, post (480) and advance (482) functions on a context are critical sections, not thread safe. Applications using such non-reentrant functions must somehow ensure that critical sections are protected from re-entrant use. Applications can use mutual exclusion locks to protect critical sections. The lock (476) and unlock (478) functions in the example of FIG. 9 provide and operate such a mutual exclusion lock to protect the critical sections in the post (480) and advance (482) functions. If only a single thread posts or advances work on a context, then that thread need never lock that context. To the extent that progress is driven independently on a context by a single thread of execution, then no mutual exclusion locking of the context itself is required—provided that no other thread ever attempts to call a function on such a context. If more than one thread will post or advance work on a context, each such thread must secure a lock before calling a post or an advance function on that context. This is one reason why it is probably a preferred architecture, given sufficient resources, to assign one thread to operate each context. Progress can be driven with advance (482) functions concurrently among multiple contexts by using multiple threads, as desired by an application—shown in the example of FIG. 7 by threads (253, 254, 262, 264) which advance work concurrently, independently and in parallel, on contexts (290, 292, 310, 312).

Posts and advances (480, 482 on FIG. 9) are functions called on a context, either in a C-type function with a context ID as a parameter, or in object oriented practice where the calling entity possesses a reference to a context or a context object as such and the posts and advances are member methods of a context object. Again referring to FIG. 7: Application-level entities, application programs (158) and application messaging modules (258), post (266, 274) data communications instructions, including SENDs, RECEIVEs, PUTs, GETs, and so on, to the work queues (282, 284, 306, 308) in contexts and then call advance functions (268, 270, 276, 278) on the contexts to progress specific data processing and data communications that carry out the instructions. The data processing and data communications effected by the advance functions include specific messages, request to send (‘RTS’) messages, acknowledgments, callback execution, transfers of transfer data or payload data, and so on. Advance functions therefore operate generally by checking a work queue for any new instructions that need to be initiated and checking data communications resources for any incoming message traffic that needs to be administered as well as increases in storage space available for outgoing message traffic, with callbacks and the like. Advance functions also carry out or trigger transfers of transfer data or payload data.

In at least some embodiments, a context's subset of a client's data processing resources is dedicated to the exclusive use of the context. In the example of FIG. 7, context (290) has a subset (294) of a client's (302) data processing resources dedicated to the exclusive use of the context (290), and context (292) has a subset (296) of a client's (302) data processing resources dedicated to the exclusive use of the context (292). Advance functions (268, 270) called on contexts (290, 292) therefore never need to secure a lock on a data communications resource before progressing work on a context—because each context (290, 292) has exclusive use of dedicated data communications resources. Usage of data communications resources in this example PAMI (218), however, is not thread-safe. When data communications resources are shared among contexts, mutual exclusion locks are needed. In contrast to the exclusive usage of resources by contexts (290, 292), contexts (310, 312) share access to their client's data communications resource (314) and therefore do not have data communications resources dedicated to exclusive use of a single context. Contexts (310, 312) therefore always must secure a mutual exclusion lock on a data communications resource before using the resource to send or receive administrative messages or transfer data.

For further explanation, here is an example pseudocode Hello World program for an application using a PAMI:

int main(int argc, char ** argv) {    PAMI_client_t client;    PAMI_context_t context;    PAMI_result_t status = PAMI_ERROR;    const char *name = “PAMI”;    status = PAMI_Client_initialize(name, &client);    size_t_n = 1;    status = PAMI_Context_createv(client, NULL, 0, &context, _n);    PAMI_configuration_t configuration;    configuration.name = PAMI_TASK_ID;    status = PAMI_Configuration_query(client, &configuration);    size_t task_id = configuration.value.intval;    configuration.name = PAMI_NUM_TASKS;    status = PAMI_Configuration_query(client, &configuration);    size_t num_tasks = configuration.value.intval;    fprintf (stderr, “Hello process %d of %d\n”, task_id, num_tasks);    status = PAMI_Context_destroy(context);    status = PAMI_Client_finalize(client);    return 0; }

This short program is termed ‘pseudocode’ because it is an explanation in the form of computer code, not a working model, not an actual program for execution. In this pseudocode example, an application initializes a client and a context for an application named “PAMI.” PAMI_Client_initialize and PAMI_Context_createv are initialization functions (316) exposed to applications as part of a PAMI's API. These functions, in dependence upon the application name “PAMI,” pull from a PAMI configuration (318) the information needed to establish a client and a context for the application. The application uses this segment:

PAMI_configuration_t configuration; configuration.name = PAMI_TASK_ID; status = PAMI_Configuration_query(client, &configuration); size_t task_id = configuration.value.intval; to retrieve its task ID and this segment:

configuration.name = PAMI_NUM_TASKS; status = PAMI_Configuration_query(client, &configuration); size_t num_tasks = configuration.value.intval; to retrieve the number of tasks presently configured to carry out parallel communications and process data communications event in the PAMI. The applications prints “Hello process task_id of num_tasks,” where task_id is the task ID of the subject instance of a parallel application, and num_tasks is the number of instances of the application executing in parallel on compute nodes. Finally, the application destroys the context and terminates the client.

For further explanation of data communications resources assigned in collections to PAMI clients, FIG. 8A sets forth a block diagram of example data communications resources (220) useful in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. The data communications resources of FIG. 8A include a gigabit Ethernet adapter (238), an Infiniband adapter (240), a Fibre Channel adapter (242), a PCI Express adapter (246), a collective operations network configured as a tree (106), shared memory (227), DMA controllers (225, 226), and a network (108) configured as a point-to-point torus or mesh like the network described above with reference to FIG. 4. A PAMI is configured with clients, each of which is in turn configured with certain collections of such data communications resources—so that, for example, the PAMI client (302) in the PAMI (218) in the example of FIG. 7 can have dedicated to its use a collection of data communications resources composed of six segments (227) of shared memory, six Gigabit Ethernet adapters (238), and six Infiniband adapters (240). And the PAMI client (304) can have dedicated to its use six Fibre Channel adapters (242), a DMA controller (225), a torus network (108), and five segments (227) of shared memory. And so on.

The DMA controllers (225, 226) in the example of FIG. 8A each is configured with DMA control logic in the form of a DMA engine (228, 229), an injection FIFO buffer (230), and a receive FIFO buffer (232). The DMA engines (228, 229) can be implemented as hardware components, logic networks of a DMA controller, in firmware, as software operating an embedded controller, as various combinations of software, firmware, or hardware, and so on. Each DMA engine (228, 229) operates on behalf of endpoints to send and receive DMA transfer data through the network (108). The DMA engines (228, 229) operate the injection buffers (230, 232) by processing first-in-first-out descriptors (234, 236) in the buffers, hence the designation ‘injection FIFO’ and ‘receive FIFO.’

For further explanation, here is an example use case, a description of the overall operation of an example PUT DMA transfer using the DMA controllers (225, 226) and network (108) in the example of FIG. 8A: An originating application (158), which is typically one instance of a parallel application running on a compute node, places a quantity of transfer data (494) at a location in its RAM (155). The application (158) then calls a post function (480) on a context (512) of an origin endpoint (352), posting a PUT instruction (390) into a work queue (282) of the context (512); the PUT instruction (390) specifies a target endpoint (354) to which the transfer data is to be sent as well as source and destination memory locations. The application then calls an advance function (482) on the context (512). The advance function (482) finds the new PUT instruction in its work queue (282) and inserts a data descriptor (234) into the injection FIFO of the origin DMA controller (225); the data descriptor includes the source and destination memory locations and the specification of the target endpoint. The origin DMA engine (225) then transfers the data descriptor (234) as well as the transfer data (494) through the network (108) to the DMA controller (226) on the target side of the transaction. The target DMA engine (229), upon receiving the data descriptor and the transfer data, places the transfer data (494) into the RAM (156) of the target application at the location specified in the data descriptor and inserts into the target DMA controller's receive FIFO (232) a data descriptor (236) that specifies the target endpoint and the location of the transfer data (494) in RAM (156). The target application (159) or application instance calls an advance function (483) on a context (513) of the target endpoint (354). The advance function (483) checks the communications resources assigned to its context (513) for incoming messages, including checking the receive FIFO (232) of the target DMA controller (226) for data descriptors that specify the target endpoint (354). The advance function (483) finds the data descriptor for the PUT transfer and advises the target application (159) that its transfer data has arrived. A GET-type DMA transfer works in a similar manner, with some differences, including, of course, the fact that transfer data flows in the opposite direction. Similarly, typical SEND transfers also operate similarly, some with rendezvous protocols, some with eager protocols, with data transmitted in packets over the a network through non-DMA network adapters or through DMA controllers.

The example of FIG. 8A includes two DMA controllers (225, 226). DMA transfers between endpoints on separate compute nodes use two DMA controllers, one on each compute node. Compute nodes can be implemented with multiple DMA controllers so that many or even all DMA transfers even among endpoints on a same compute node can be carried out using two DMA engines. In some embodiments at least, however, a compute node, like the example compute node (152) of FIG. 2, has only one DMA engine, so that that DMA engine can be use to conduct both sides of transfers between endpoints on that compute node. For further explanation of this fact, FIG. 8B sets forth a functional block diagram of an example DMA controller (225) operatively coupled to a network (108)—in an architecture where this DMA controller (225) is the only DMA controller on a compute node—and an origin endpoint (352) and its target endpoint (354) are both located on the same compute node (152). In the example of FIG. 8B, a single DMA engine (228) operates with two threads of execution (502, 504) on behalf of endpoints (352, 354) on a same compute node to send and receive DMA transfer data through a segment (227) of shared memory. A transmit thread (502) injects transfer data into the network (108) as specified in data descriptors (234) in an injection FIFO buffer (230), and a receive thread (502) receives transfer data from the network (108) as specified in data descriptors (236) in a receive FIFO buffer (232).

The overall operation of an example PUT DMA transfer with the DMA controllers (225) and the network (108) in the example of FIG. 8B is: An originating application (158), that is actually one of multiple instances (158, 159) of a parallel application running on a compute node (152) in separate threads of execution, places a quantity of transfer data (494) at a location in its RAM (155). The application (158) then calls a post function (480) on a context (512) of an origin endpoint (352), posting a PUT instruction (390) into a work queue (282) of the context (512); the PUT instruction specifies a target endpoint (354) to which the transfer data is to be sent as well as source and destination memory locations. The application (158) then calls an advance function (482) on the context (512). The advance function (482) finds the new PUT instruction (390) in its work queue (282) and inserts a data descriptor (234) into the injection FIFO of the DMA controller (225); the data descriptor includes the source and destination memory locations and the specification of the target endpoint. The DMA engine (225) then transfers by its transmit and receive threads (502, 504) through the network (108) the data descriptor (234) as well as the transfer data (494). The DMA engine (228), upon receiving by its receive thread (504) the data descriptor and the transfer data, places the transfer data (494) into the RAM (156) of the target application and inserts into the DMA controller's receive FIFO (232) a data descriptor (236) that specifies the target endpoint and the location of the transfer data (494) in RAM (156). The target application (159) calls an advance function (483) on a context (513) of the target endpoint (354). The advance function (483) checks the communications resources assigned to its context for incoming messages, including checking the receive FIFO (232) of the DMA controller (225) for data descriptors that specify the target endpoint (354). The advance function (483) finds the data descriptor for the PUT transfer and advises the target application (159) that its transfer data has arrived. Again, a GET-type DMA transfer works in a similar manner, with some differences, including, of course, the fact that transfer data flows in the opposite direction. And typical SEND transfers also operate similarly, some with rendezvous protocols, some with eager protocols, with data transmitted in packets over the a network through non-DMA network adapters or through DMA controllers.

By use of an architecture like that illustrated and described with reference to FIG. 8B, a parallel application or an application messaging module that is already programmed to use DMA transfers can gain the benefit of the speed of DMA data transfers among endpoints on the same compute node with no need to reprogram the applications or the application messaging modules to use the network in other modes. In this way, an application or an application messaging module, already programmed for DMA, can use the same DMA calls through a same API for DMA regardless whether subject endpoints are on the same compute node or on separate compute nodes.

For further explanation, FIG. 10 sets forth a functional block diagram of example endpoints useful in parallel computers that process data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of the present invention. In the example of FIG. 10, a PAMI (218) is implemented with instances on two separate compute nodes (152, 153) that include four endpoints (338, 340, 342, 344). These endpoints are opaque objects used to address an origin or destination in a process and are constructed from a (client, task, context) tuple. Non-DMA SEND and RECEIVE instructions as well as DMA instructions such as PUT and GET address a destination by use of an endpoint object or endpoint identifier.

Each endpoint (338, 340, 342, 344) in the example of FIG. 10 is composed of a client (302, 303, 304, 305), a task (332, 333, 334, 335), and a context (290, 292, 310, 312). Using a client a component in the specification of an endpoint disambiguates the task and context identifiers, as these identifiers may be the same for multiple clients. A task is used as a component in the specification of an endpoint to construct an endpoint to address a process accessible through a context. A context in the specification of an endpoint identifies, refers to, or represents the specific context associated with a the destination or target task—because the context identifies a specific threading point on a task. A context offset identifies which threading point is to process a particular communications operation. Endpoints enable “crosstalk” which is the act of issuing communication on a local context with a particular context offset that is directed to a target endpoint with no correspondence to a source context or source context offset.

For efficient utilization of storage in an environment where multiple tasks of a client reside on the same physical compute node, an application may choose to write an endpoint table (288, 300 on FIG. 7) in a segment of shared memory (227, 346, 348). It is the responsibility of the application to allocate such segments of shared memory and coordinate the initialization and access of any data structures shared between processes. This includes any endpoint objects which are created by one process or instance of an application and read by another process.

Endpoints (342, 344) on compute node (153) serve respectively two application instances (157, 159). The tasks (334, 336) in endpoints (342, 344) are different. The task (334) in endpoint (342) is identified by the task ID (249) of application (157), and the task (336) in endpoint (344) is identified by the task ID (251) of application (159). The clients (304, 305) in endpoints (342, 344) are different, separate clients. Client (304) in endpoint (342) associates data communications resources (e.g., 294, 296, 314 on FIG. 7) dedicated exclusively to the use of application (157), while client (305) in endpoint (344) associates data communications resources dedicated exclusively to the use of application (159). Contexts (310, 312) in endpoints (342, 344) are different, separate contexts. Context (310) in endpoint (342) operates on behalf of application (157) a subset of the data communications resources of client (304), and context (312) in endpoint (344) operates on behalf of application (159) a subset of the data communications resources of client (305).

Contrasted with the PAMIs (218) on compute node (153), the PAMI (218) on compute node (152) serves only one instance of a parallel application (158) with two endpoints (338, 340). The tasks (332, 333) in endpoints (338, 340) are the same, because they both represent a same instance of a same application (158); both tasks (332,333) therefore are identified, either with a same variable value, references to a same object, or the like, by the task ID (250) of application (158). The clients (302, 303) in endpoints (338, 340) are optionally either different, separate clients or the same client. If they are different, each associates a separate collection of data communications resources. If they are the same, then each client (302, 303) in the PAMI (218) on compute node (152) associates a same set of data communications resources and is identified with a same value, object reference, or the like. Contexts (290, 292) in endpoints (338, 340) are different, separate contexts. Context (290) in endpoint (338) operates on behalf of application (158) a subset of the data communications resources of client (302) regardless whether clients (302, 303) are the same client or different clients, and context (292) in endpoint (340) operates on behalf of application (158) a subset of the data communications resources of client (303) regardless whether clients (302, 303) are the same client or different clients. Thus the tasks (332, 333) are the same; the clients (302, 303) can be the same; and the endpoints (338, 340) are distinguished at least by different contexts (290, 292), each of which operates on behalf of one of the threads (251-254) of application (158), identified typically by a context offset or a threading point.

Endpoints (338, 340) being as they are on the same compute node (152) can effect DMA data transfers between endpoints (338, 340) through DMA controller (225) and a segment of shared local memory (227). In the absence of such shared memory (227), endpoints (338, 340) can effect DMA data transfers through the DMA controller (225) and the network (108), even though both endpoints (338, 340) are on the same compute node (152). DMA transfers between endpoint (340) on compute node (152) and endpoint (344) on another compute node (153) go through DMA controllers (225, 226) and either a network (108) or a segment of shared remote memory (346). DMA transfers between endpoint (338) on compute node (152) and endpoint (342) on another compute node (153) also go through DMA controllers (225, 226) and either a network (108) or a segment of shared remote memory (346).

The segment of shared remote memory (346) is a component of a Non-Uniform Memory Access (‘NUMA’) architecture, a segment in a memory module installed anywhere in the architecture of a parallel computer except on a local compute node. The segment of shared remote memory (346) is ‘remote’ in the sense that it is not installed on a local compute node. A local compute node is ‘local’ to the endpoints located on that particular compute node. The segment of shared remote memory (346), therefore, is ‘remote’ with respect to endpoints (338, 340) on compute node (158) if it is in a memory module on compute node (153) or anywhere else in the same parallel computer except on compute node (158).

Endpoints (342, 344) being as they are on the same compute node (153) can effect DMA data transfers between endpoints (342, 344) through DMA controller (226) and a segment of shared local memory (348). In the absence of such shared memory (348), endpoints (342, 344) can effect DMA data transfers through the DMA controller (226) and the network (108), even though both endpoints (342, 344) are on the same compute node (153). DMA transfers between endpoint (344) on compute node (153) and endpoint (340) on another compute node (152) go through DMA controllers (226, 225) and either a network (108) or a segment of shared remote memory (346). DMA transfers between endpoint (342) on compute node (153) and endpoint (338) on another compute node (158) go through DMA controllers (226, 225) and either a network (108) or a segment of shared remote memory (346). Again, the segment of shared remote memory (346) is ‘remote’ with respect to endpoints (342, 344) on compute node (153) if it is in a memory module on compute node (158) or anywhere else in the same parallel computer except on compute node (153).

For further explanation, FIG. 11 sets forth a flow chart illustrating an example method of eager send data communications in a PAMI of a parallel computer according to embodiments of the present invention. Eager send data communications are defined, at least in part, by distinguishing rendezvous communications. Rendezvous protocols include back-and-forth handshake communications to establish availability and location of receive buffers. Rendezvous sends are traditionally directed toward larger messages with target buffers in application space, so that rendezvous protocols result in more data communications traffic with reduced demand for intermediate buffering in a system messaging layer such as a PAMI. PAMIs according to embodiments of the present application typically support both rendezvous and eager protocols.

Eager sends traditionally assume that a receive buffer is available and therefore, unlike rendezvous sends, do not carry out back-and-forth handshake communications to establish availability and location of receive buffers. Eager sends traditionally transfer header information, message ID, endpoints, buffer addresses, message size, and so on, along with payload data, often all effectively in the same message. Traditional eager protocols therefore reduce data communications traffic for small messages—although they do require the receive side to maintain available receive buffer space. As will be seen in the explanation below, eager sends according to embodiments of the present invention make available a kind of ‘super’ eager send in which, not only does the eager send make no preparation for a receive buffer, in some embodiments at least, there is no separate receive buffer; the send buffer and the receive buffer are exactly the same physical memory buffer. To the extent that in an embodiment, a target endpoint is configured to use the shared-memory send buffer as its receive buffer, the receive side is relieved of the traditional burden of maintaining buffer space available for eager sends, a significant advance over the prior art of eager data communications.

The method of FIG. 11 is implemented in a PAMI (218) of a parallel computer composed of a number of compute nodes (102 on FIG. 1) that execute a parallel application, like those described above in this specification with reference to FIGS. 1-10. The PAMI (218) includes data communications endpoints (352, 354, and, e.g., 338, 340, 342, 344 on FIG. 10), with each endpoint specifying data communications parameters for a thread (251, 252) of execution on a compute node, including specifications of a client (302, 303), a context (512, 513), and a task (332, 333), all as described above in this specification with reference to FIGS. 1-10. The endpoints are coupled for data communications through the PAMI (218) and through data communications resources (e.g., 238, 240, 242, 246, 106, 108, 227 on FIG. 8A). The endpoints can be located on the same compute node or on different compute nodes.

In this example, the threads (251, 252) are components of separate processes (378, 380), so that the functions of the endpoints execute in separate processes of execution with separate read/write (‘RW/’) virtual address spaces. The processes themselves (378, 380) can be either multi-threaded or single-threaded; for single-threaded processes, the terms ‘thread’ and ‘process’ are practically synonyms. For further explanation of the relations among endpoints, threads, and computer memory, FIG. 12 sets forth a block diagram of example computer memory configured for eager send data communications through shared read-only memory according to embodiments of the present invention. The example of FIG. 12 diagrams computer memory for N endpoints (342) labeled 0 . . . N−1, which operate in N processes of execution (628) also labeled 0 . . . N−1, with the processes (628) in turn executing in N extents of computer memory organized in read/write (‘R/W’) virtual address spaces (602), also labeled 0 . . . N−1, so that there is one of the R/W virtual address spaces (602), 0 . . . N−1, for each of the processes (628), 0 . . . N−1, and therefore also one of the R/W virtual address spaces (602), 0 . . . N−1, for each of the endpoint (342), 0 . . . N−1.

The R/W virtual address spaces (602) are separate and overlapping. Each of the R/W virtual address spaces (602) includes 2 gigabytes of virtual memory addressed (618) 00000000 . . . 7FFFFFFF hexadecimal. Unless context requires otherwise, the memory addresses in this discussion generally are expressed in hexadecimal. The R/W virtual address spaces (602) are separate in the sense that they are not shared across processes or endpoint; no endpoint can access R/W virtual memory of any other endpoint. The R/W virtual address spaces (602) are overlapping in that their address ranges overlap; each address in the range 00000000 . . . 7FFFFFFF (618) appears in all R/W virtual address spaces (602). The example computer memory of FIG. 12 includes 2 gigabytes of physical memory (604), also addressed 00000000 . . . 7FFFFFFF (622). The physical memory (604) is organized in frames (616), and frames (616) of physical memory (604) are allocated to pages (612) in the R/W virtual memory spaces (602). The R/W virtual address spaces (602) are organized in pages (612), and pages for which physical memory is allocated are mapped (650) to frames (630) of physical memory (604)—although an allocated frame is mapped (632) only to one page in one R/W virtual address space. There is no requirement that all pages (612) of R/W virtual memory have allocated frames (616), and, in embodiments, especially in computers having relatively less physical memory, there will be unallocated pages in the R/W virtual memory spaces (602). In this example, if N=1000 and physical memory of 2 gigabytes were allocated evenly across 1000 R/W virtual address spaces (602), each R/W virtual address space would be allocated only 2 megabytes of physical memory (604), and only 2 megabytes out of the 2 gigabyte address ranges (608) would be mapped to physical memory. That is, in such an example, only 1/1000 of the available virtual memory in the R/W virtual memory spaces (602) would be allocated physical memory.

The computer memory in the example of FIG. 12 also includes 2 gigabytes disposed in a read-only (‘R/O’) virtual memory address space (606). The organization of the RO virtual memory contrasts with the organization of the R/W virtual memory just described in that all pages (614) in the R/O virtual memory space (606) are allocated and mapped (634) to frames (616) of physical memory (604). At boot time, or at run time at behest of an application, an operating system of the parallel computer upon which the endpoints (342) reside maps all of the physical memory into the R/O virtual address space (606), by use of, for example, a page table like the one illustrated and described below with reference to FIG. 13. In addition, the read-only virtual address space (606) is non-overlapping with respect to the read/write virtual address spaces (602). The R/W virtual address spaces (602) begin with address 00000000 and end at 7FFFFFFF (618). The R/O virtual address space begins with the next higher address 80000000 and extends through FFFFFFFF (620). All endpoints have shared read-only access (610) to all the memory in the entire R/O virtual address space (606). From the perspective of the endpoints (342), each endpoint has available to it 4 gigabytes of virtual memory addressed 00000000 . . . FFFFFFFF, the lower half of which, 00000000 . . . 7FFFFFFF, is separate R/W memory (602) shared with no other endpoints, the upper half of which, 80000000 . . . FFFFFFFF, is R/O memory (606) shared with all other endpoints.

Here in the example of FIG. 12, the three memory address ranges (618, 620, 622) are the same size, but that is not a requirement of the present invention. To the extent that the operating system maps all physical memory to R/O virtual memory, then those two address ranges (620, 622) are the same size, but not so for the size (618) of the R/W virtual memory, which can differ in size from the physical memory and the R/O virtual memory. It is a trend in highly parallel computer operations, exemplified by supercomputers like the IBM BlueGene/Q™, to pin memory against page faults and disk swaps. Once a frame is allocated to a page of R/W virtual memory, the frame is never swapped to disk, and no access of memory in it ever experiences a memory page fault. There may be cache misses, but no page faults. In compute nodes with, for example, 16 processors and 16 processes running 16 endpoints, if their design calls for 1 gigabyte of R/W virtual memory per processor, all of which can be allocated and pinned at the same time, then the design also therefore requires 16 gigabytes of physical memory and 16 gigabytes of R/O virtual memory. Many other such variations of memory size in computers that carry out data communications according to embodiments of this invention will occur those of skill in the art, many of them will be implemented, and all such are well within the scope of the present invention.

Again referring to FIG. 11: The method of FIG. 11 includes receiving (364) in an origin endpoint (352) of the PAMI (218) a data communications instruction (390). The instruction specifies a transmission of transfer data (384) from the origin endpoint (352) to a target endpoint (354), and the data communications instruction is characterized by an instruction type (382); the instruction can be characterized as a SEND instruction for a data transfer through a network, a PUT through DMA, a GET through a shared memory segment, and so on. For further explanation, here is a non-exclusive listing of additional examples of data communications instruction types:

-   -   many collective instruction types, typified by BROADCAST,         SCATTER, GATHER, and REDUCE, but including many variations         according to particular collective operations, computer         architectures, availability of tree networks or mesh networks,         whether shared memory segments are available, and so on,     -   rendezvous network-based SEND instruction types in which both         the origin endpoint and the target endpoint communicate and         participate in a data transfer, good for longer messages,         typically composed of handshakes transferring header information         followed by packet switched messaging or DMA operations to         transfer payload data,     -   eager network-based SEND instruction types in which only the         origin endpoint conducts a data transfer, merely informing the         target endpoint that the transfer has occurred, but requiring no         communications or other participation from the target endpoint,     -   rendezvous SEND instruction types with operations conducted, not         through a network, but through shared memory, in which both the         origin endpoint and the target endpoint communicate and         participate in a data transfer,     -   eager send instruction types conducted, not through a network,         but through shared memory, in which only the origin endpoint         conducts a data transfer, merely informing the target endpoint         that the transfer has occurred, but requiring no communications         or other participation from the target endpoint,     -   network-based DMA PUT instruction types, useful for fast         transfers of small messages, sometimes containing header data         and payload data in a single transfer or packet—DMA algorithms         also can be used as components of other algorithm—as for example         a SEND algorithm that does an origin-target handshake and then         conducts payload transfers with PUTs,     -   DMA PUT instruction types with transfers through shared memory,         again useful for fast transfers of small messages, sometimes         containing header data and payload data in a single transfer or         packet—DMA algorithms also can be used as components of other         algorithm—as for example a SEND algorithm that does an         origin-target handshake through a segment of shared memory and         then conducts payload transfers with PUTs,     -   data communications instruction types based on DMA GET         operations, either networked or through shared memory, and     -   data communications instruction types that include eager or         rendezvous RECEIVE operations, either with send-side matching of         SENDs or with receive-side matching.

In the example of FIG. 11, an originating application (158), typically an instance of a parallel application running on a compute node, places a quantity of transfer data at a location in its RAM, and includes the memory location and the quantity of transfer data in parameters (383) for the data communications instruction (390). The data communications instruction (390) then is received in the origin endpoint (352) through operation of a post function (480) called by the originating application (158) on a context (512) of the origin endpoint (352), posting the data communications instruction (390) to a work queue (282) of the context. The instruction parameters (383) also typically specify one or more callback functions, a dispatch callback, a done callback, or the like, to support and implement the overall function of the data communications instruction. Any done callback is registered in the PAMI (218) for later use, upon completion of the overall execution of the data communications instruction. Such a done callback function (391) is an application-level instruction called by an advance function of the PAMI when execution of the data communications instruction is fully complete. Such a done callback can carry out any actions desired by the application at that point, but readers will recognize that a typical purpose of the done callback is to advise the calling application of completion of the data transfer pursuant to the data communications instruction. The application's post (480) of the data communications instruction (390) is non-blocking, so that the application continues other work while the PAMI executes the data communications instruction. Not blocking to wait for the data communications instruction to complete, it is common for the application to want a callback to advise of completion of the data transfer pursuant to the data communications instruction.

In the example of FIG. 11, the instruction type (382) is specified as an eager send data communications instruction, and the transfer data (384) is disposed in a send buffer (376) in the R/W virtual address space of the origin endpoint (251), and the send buffer (376) is characterized by a read/write send buffer memory address (372) in the read/write virtual address space of the origin endpoint (352). Treating the endpoint labeled N−1 on FIG. 12 as the origin endpoint, the send buffer (376) is shown disposed in one of the R/W virtual address spaces (602) labeled N−1 beginning at R/W virtual address (372). The contents of the send buffer are stored in physical memory (604, 626) beginning at physical address (624), and the send buffer is also represented in the R/O virtual address space (606, 608) beginning at R/O virtual address (368).

When the origin endpoint (352), through its advance function (482), takes up for processing the eager send data communication instruction (390) from its work queue (282), the origin endpoint is advised of the read/write send buffer memory address (372) in the call parameters (383) of the instruction (390), but the origin endpoint does not yet know the corresponding read-only send buffer memory address in the read-only virtual address space. The method of FIG. 11 therefore includes determining by the origin endpoint for the send buffer (376) a read-only send buffer memory address (368) in the read-only virtual address space (606). The read-only virtual address space is shared as described above by both the origin endpoint (352) and the target endpoint (354). The read-only virtual address space (606) is non-overlapping with respect to the read/write virtual address space (e.g., 602, N−1 on FIG. 12). Indeed, the read-only virtual address space (606) is non-overlapping with respect to all read/write virtual address spaces (602 on FIG. 12)—so that there is no never any need to disambiguate virtual addresses in the R/O virtual address space—there is only one address in the R/O virtual address space for each address in the physical memory (604). The read-only virtual address space is established by an operating system of the parallel computer, on which operate both the origin endpoint (352) and the target endpoint (354), with all frames (616) of physical memory (604) mapped to pages (614) of virtual memory in the read-only virtual address space (606).

With reference both to FIG. 11 and also to FIG. 12: In some embodiments, the R/W virtual address space (606) and the R/O virtual address space are both characterized by a same virtual address space size, in this example, 2 gigabytes. In such embodiments, mapping all frames (616) of physical memory (604) to pages (604) of virtual memory (606) can be implemented by mapping frames to pages with memory addresses that are identical except for the most significant bit in each address: frame 00000000 maps to R/O page 10000000, frame 00000001 maps to R/O page 10000001, frame 00000010 maps to R/O page 10000010, and so on. In such embodiments, determining (366) for the send buffer (376) its corresponding read-only send buffer memory address (368) in the read-only virtual address space (606) can be carried out by setting (386) the most significant bit (‘MSB’) in the read/write send buffer memory address (372).

As described above, however, there are many embodiments in which no such correspondence exists generally between R/W virtual addresses and R/O virtual addresses. In other embodiments, therefore, determining (366) for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address (368) in a read-only virtual address space (606) is carried out by a PAMI query (388) to the operating system (162). Such a query can be formed, for example, as:

-   -   RO_buf=RO_Addr_get(RW_address);

In this example, RO_buf is the R/O send buffer memory address in the R/O virtual address space, RW_addr is the R/W send buffer memory address in the read/write virtual address space of the origin endpoint, and RO_addr_get( ) is a member method in an application programming interface (‘API’) exposed by the operating system to the PAMI. The operating system (162) maps R/O virtual memory addresses to R/W virtual memory addresses, pinning the underlying real address to two virtual addresses, one permitting R/W by the origin endpoint, the other allowing R/O by the target endpoint. For further explanation, referring to FIGS. 11, 12, and 13: In this example, the operating system (162) maintains records (654) of associations among addresses in physical memory (604), in read/write virtual address spaces (602), and in the read-only virtual address space (606). In FIG. 13, such records of associations are gathered and maintained by the operating system in a page table (636), although readers will recognize that the table structures is a convenient structure for explanation, not a limitation; a similar structure typically is implemented in a translation lookaside buffer (‘TLB’), and in other similar structures as will occur to those of skill in the art. Each record (654) in the example page table (636) represents an association, that is, a mapping, of a frame of physical memory to either a page of R/W virtual memory or a page of R/O virtual memory. The virtual memory pages are listed in column (640), and the physical memory frames are listed in column (638). Each record in the table includes control bits (644), such as, for example, dirty bits, access control bits, and so on. In particular here, the control bits include a R/O bit that is reset to ‘0’ for R/W pages and set to ‘1’ for R/O pages.

The table (636) is sorted on the page numbers (640), so that the lower pages numbers (652) represent pages in the R/W virtual address spaces (602 on FIG. 12), and the higher page numbers (642) represent pages in the R/O virtual address space (606 on FIG. 12). The first five page numbers in the example table of FIG. 13 require disambiguation. The first three have the same value:

-   -   0000000000000000     -   0000000000000000     -   0000000000000000

And the fourth and fifth page numbers in column (640) also are the same:

-   -   0000000000000001     -   0000000000000001

R/W pages with the same page number are in separate R/W address spaces and are disambiguated with four additional control bits that provide a R/W virtual address space identifier (648). With four bits in the R/W virtual address space identifier (648), the identifier can disambiguate up to 16 separate R/W virtual address spaces (602). As an alternative to the use of the R/W virtual address space identifier (648), the operating system can be configured to maintain separate page tables for each of the separate R/W virtual address spaces (602). For the page numbers in R/O virtual address space (642), for which only one virtual address is mapped to each physical address, no disambiguation is needed, and the R/W virtual address space identifiers (648) for all those page numbers (642) are set to zero (656).

Thus determining (366) for the send buffer (372) a read-only send buffer memory address (368) in the read-only virtual address space (606), query (388), can be carried out by the operating system's finding of a physical memory address (624) associated with the R/W send buffer memory address (372) and a R/O virtual memory address (368) associated with the physical memory address (624). In effect, this method involves two lookups in a page table (636) or a TLB. First the query function of the operating system finds the R/W send buffer memory address (372), or at least its page number, in column (640). That yields the corresponding frame number, the physical memory address, associated in the same record in column (638). Because that frame is mapped to a page in a R/W virtual address space, it is occurs twice in column (638), once in a mapping to the R/W virtual address space, the record just found, and again in its mapping into the R/O virtual address space. Here, for example, that the two frame numbers at reference (658) are identical. One maps to page 0000000000000110 in the R/W virtual spaces at (652) and one maps to page 1111111111111010 in the R/O virtual address space at (642). Having found the frame that maps to the pertinent R/W page, the operating system then finds that same frame number again, its other entry in column (638), and that identifies the corresponding frame in the R/O virtual address space; two lookups: one on the R/W page for the frame, a second on the frame for the R/O page.

The method of FIG. 11 also includes communicating (370) by the origin endpoint (352) to the target endpoint (354) an eager send message header (374) that includes the R/O send buffer memory address (368). The send buffer (376) and the transfer data (384) are both disposed in computer memory that is directly accessible, read-only, by the target endpoint (354) through the R/O virtual address space (606). The quantity of transfer data can be well known, predetermined, as in packet sizes; it can be indicated with header and tail markers; it can be specified in other header information in addition to the R/O send buffer memory address (368). Depending on how the target endpoint treats the transfer data, it is possible that the ‘transfer’ is effectively complete as soon as the target endpoint receives the header (374), because, in one embodiment at least, the target endpoint (354) uses the send buffer (376, 608) as a receive buffer without copying the transfer data (384) from the send buffer to any other receive buffer. In such an embodiment, the target endpoint has full access to the transfer data as soon as the target endpoint has the header (374). Moreover in an embodiment, the origin endpoint (352) communicates the eager send message header (374) to the target endpoint by writing it into the send buffer (376) at the head of the transfer data at, for example, a predetermined memory location that an advance function (483) of the target endpoint (354) monitors as part of its assigned data communications resources. When a target advance function (483) finds a new header in the send buffer (376), the target endpoint (354) has instant access to the transfer data (376).

The method of FIG. 11 also includes receiving (385) the transfer data (384) in the target endpoint (354), carried out by an advance function (483) of a context (513) of the target endpoint (354). In this example, a dispatch callback (272) can be specified among the call parameters (383) of the data communications instruction (390), and the specification of the dispatch callback (282) can be communicated to the target endpoint as part of the eager send message header (374). The specification of the dispatch callback (272) can be implemented as an address of a function callable directly, as an index into a list of callback functions previously registered with the target endpoint, and in other ways as will occur to those of skill in the art. The dispatch callback function (272) is to be called upon dispatch, that is, upon receipt of the eager send message header (374) by the target endpoint (354). The advance function (483), called by a target-side application or application messaging module to advance work in the target endpoint, checks the data communication resources assigned to its context (513), finds the header (374), and calls the dispatch callback function (272) associated with the transfer data (384) to move the transfer data from a receive buffer to application space. Described above is the option of treating the send buffer as a receive buffer. In addition, the receiving function (385) can be configured in embodiments to copy the transfer data (384) from the send buffer (376) to a target receive buffer (662) that is characterized by a read/write receive buffer memory address (660) in a read/write virtual address space of the target endpoint. Referring to FIG. 13 and taking as the target endpoint the one of the illustrated endpoints (342) labeled ‘2,’ then that endpoint's R/W virtual address space is the one of the illustrated R/W virtual address spaces (602) labeled ‘2,’ and that R/W virtual address space contains the target receive buffer (662) characterized by the read/write receive buffer memory address (660).

Readers will recognize that eager send data communications in a PAMI according to embodiments of this invention support, in effect, ‘super-sized short’-type data communications. In the case of ‘short’ messages, and often in the eager architecture, the header information and the transfer data are both in the same message or packet. This is usually the case in prior art for network transfers where the transfer data is generally in exactly the same packet as the header, hence the designation ‘short.’ Because in data communications according to the present invention the transfer data is already directly accessible in the R/O virtual address space, implementers can create a super-sized short messaging architecture. Endpoints in embodiments can pass the R/O virtual address of the send buffer, still in the original location in the remote R/W virtual address space, and the target endpoint need only memcopy( ) it to a receive buffer of the target endpoint—implementing a transfer of almost any size, hence the designation ‘supersized,’ with one or two memcopies and one callback only—only one memcopy from application to send buffer if the target endpoint uses the send buffer as its receive buffer. Even if the eager header is transmitted over a network or through DMA rather than through shared memory, embodiments of the present invention support extremely efficient data communications. Data communications according to embodiments of the present invention are very fast—the transfer data has arrived as soon as the eager header is received. And data communications according to embodiments of the present invention have extremely low latency—the post of the data communications instruction is non-blocking, returns immediately; any done callback will execute immediately; and a dispatch callback executes as soon as the header is received in the target endpoint.

Example embodiments of the present invention are described largely in the context of a fully functional parallel computer that processes data communications in a PAMI. Readers of skill in the art will recognize, however, that the present invention also may be embodied in a computer program product disposed upon computer readable storage media for use with any suitable data processing system. Such computer readable storage media may be any storage medium for machine-readable information, including magnetic media, optical media, or other suitable media. Examples of such media include magnetic disks in hard drives or diskettes, compact disks for optical drives, magnetic tape, and others as will occur to those of skill in the art. Persons skilled in the art will immediately recognize that any computer system having suitable programming means will be capable of executing the steps of the method of the invention as embodied in a computer program product. Persons skilled in the art will recognize also that, although some of the example embodiments described in this specification are oriented to software installed and executing on computer hardware, nevertheless, alternative embodiments implemented as firmware or as hardware are well within the scope of the present invention.

As will be appreciated by those of skill in the art, aspects of the present invention may be embodied as method, apparatus or system, or computer program product. Accordingly, aspects of the present invention may take the form of an entirely hardware embodiment or an embodiment combining software and hardware aspects (firmware, resident software, micro-code, microcontroller-embedded code, and the like) that may all generally be referred to herein as a “circuit,” “module,” “system,” or “apparatus.” Furthermore, aspects of the present invention may take the form of a computer program product embodied in one or more computer readable media having computer readable program code embodied thereon.

Any combination of one or more computer readable media may be utilized. Such a computer readable medium may be a computer readable signal medium or a computer readable storage medium. A computer readable storage medium may be, for example, but not limited to, an electronic, magnetic, optical, electromagnetic, infrared, or semiconductor system, apparatus, or device, or any suitable combination of the foregoing. More specific examples (a non-exhaustive list) of the computer readable storage medium would include the following: an electrical connection having one or more wires, a portable computer diskette, a hard disk, a random access memory (RAM), a read-only memory (ROM), an erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM or Flash memory), an optical fiber, a portable compact disc read-only memory (CD-ROM), an optical storage device, a magnetic storage device, or any suitable combination of the foregoing. In the context of this document, a computer readable storage medium may be any tangible medium that can contain, or store a program for use by or in connection with an instruction execution system, apparatus, or device.

A computer readable signal medium may include a propagated data signal with computer readable program code embodied therein, for example, in baseband or as part of a carrier wave. Such a propagated signal may take any of a variety of forms, including, but not limited to, electro-magnetic, optical, or any suitable combination thereof. A computer readable signal medium may be any computer readable medium that is not a computer readable storage medium and that can communicate, propagate, or transport a program for use by or in connection with an instruction execution system, apparatus, or device. Program code embodied on a computer readable medium may be transmitted using any appropriate medium, including but not limited to wireless, wireline, optical fiber cable, RF, etc., or any suitable combination of the foregoing.

Computer program code for carrying out operations for aspects of the present invention may be written in any combination of one or more programming languages, including an object oriented programming language such as Java, Smalltalk, C++ or the like and conventional procedural programming languages, such as the “C” programming language or similar programming languages. The program code may execute entirely on the user's computer, partly on the user's computer, as a stand-alone software package, partly on the user's computer and partly on a remote computer or entirely on the remote computer or server. In the latter scenario, the remote computer may be connected to the user's computer through any type of network, including a local area network (LAN) or a wide area network (WAN), or the connection may be made to an external computer (for example, through the Internet using an Internet Service Provider).

Aspects of the present invention are described in this specification with reference to flowchart illustrations and/or block diagrams of methods, apparatus (systems) and computer program products according to embodiments of the invention. It will be understood that each block of the flowchart illustrations and/or block diagrams, and combinations of blocks in the flowchart illustrations and/or block diagrams, can be implemented by computer program instructions. These computer program instructions may be provided to a processor of a general purpose computer, special purpose computer, or other programmable data processing apparatus to produce a machine, such that the instructions, which execute via the processor of the computer or other programmable data processing apparatus, create means for implementing the functions/acts specified in the flowchart and/or block diagram block or blocks.

These computer program instructions may also be stored in a computer readable medium that can direct a computer, other programmable data processing apparatus, or other devices to function in a particular manner, such that the instructions stored in the computer readable medium produce an article of manufacture including instructions which implement the function/act specified in the flowchart and/or block diagram block or blocks.

The computer program instructions may also be loaded onto a computer, other programmable data processing apparatus, or other devices to cause a series of operational steps to be performed on the computer, other programmable apparatus or other devices to produce a computer implemented process such that the instructions which execute on the computer or other programmable apparatus provide processes for implementing the functions/acts specified in the flowchart and/or block diagram block or blocks.

The flowcharts and block diagrams in the Figures illustrate the architecture, functionality, and operation of possible implementations of computer apparatus, methods, and computer program products according to various embodiments of the present invention. In this regard, each block in a flowchart or block diagram may represent a module, segment, or portion of code, which comprises one or more executable instructions for implementing the specified logical function(s). It should also be noted that, in some alternative implementations, the functions noted in the block may occur out of the order noted in the figures. For example, two blocks shown in succession may, in fact, be executed substantially concurrently, or the blocks may sometimes be executed in the reverse order, depending upon the functionality involved. It will also be noted that each block of the block diagrams and/or flowchart illustrations, and combinations of blocks in the block diagrams and/or flowchart illustration, can be implemented by special purpose hardware-based systems that perform the specified functions or acts, or combinations of special purpose hardware and computer instructions.

It will be understood from the foregoing description that modifications and changes may be made in various embodiments of the present invention without departing from its true spirit. The descriptions in this specification are for purposes of illustration only and are not to be construed in a limiting sense. The scope of the present invention is limited only by the language of the following claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of eager send data communications in a parallel active messaging interface (‘PAMI’) of a parallel computer, the parallel computer comprising a plurality of compute nodes that execute a parallel application, the PAMI comprising data communications endpoints, each endpoint comprising a specification of data communications parameters for a thread of execution on a compute node, including specifications of a client, a context, and a task, the compute nodes and the endpoints coupled for data communications through the PAMI and through data communications resources, the method comprising: receiving in an origin endpoint of the PAMI an eager send data communications instruction that specifies a transmission of transfer data from the origin endpoint to a target endpoint, the transfer data disposed in a send buffer, the send buffer characterized by a read/write send buffer memory address in a read/write virtual address space of the origin endpoint; determining by the origin endpoint for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space, the read-only virtual address space shared by both the origin endpoint and the target endpoint, the read-only virtual address space non-overlapping with respect to the read/write virtual address space, the read-only virtual address space established by an operating system of the parallel computer with all frames of physical memory mapped to pages of virtual memory in the read-only virtual address space; and communicating by the origin endpoint to the target endpoint an eager send message header that includes the read-only send buffer memory address.
 2. The method of claim 1 wherein: the read/write virtual address space and the read-only virtual address space are both characterized by a same virtual address space size; all frames of physical memory mapped to pages of virtual memory further comprises frames mapped to pages with memory addresses that are identical except for the most significant bit in each address; and determining for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space comprises setting a most significant bit in the read/write send buffer memory address.
 3. The method of claim 1 wherein determining for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space comprises determining for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space through a PAMI query to the operating system.
 4. The method of claim 1 wherein: the operating system maintains records of associations among addresses in physical memory, in read/write virtual address spaces, and in the read-only virtual address space; and determining for the send buffer a read-only send buffer memory address in a read-only virtual address space further comprises finding through the operating system a physical memory address associated with the read/write send buffer memory address and a read-only virtual memory address associated with the physical memory address.
 5. The method of claim 1 wherein: each endpoint of the PAMI operates with a separate read/write virtual address space backed by real memory; and all endpoints of the PAMI share the read-only virtual address space, the read-only virtual address space being non-overlapping with respect to all of the separate read/write virtual address spaces of the endpoints.
 6. The method of claim 1 further comprising copying by the target endpoint transfer data from the send buffer to a target receive buffer that is characterized by a read/write receive buffer memory address in a read/write virtual address space of the target endpoint.
 7. The method of claim 1 further comprising using by the target endpoint the send buffer as a target receive buffer without copying by the target endpoint transfer data from the send buffer to a receive buffer.
 8. The method of claim 1 wherein: each client comprises a collection of data communications resources dedicated to the exclusive use of an application-level data processing entity; each context comprises a subset of the collection of data processing resources of a client, context functions, and a work queue of data transfer instructions to be performed by use of the subset through the context functions operated by an assigned thread of execution; and each task represents a process of execution of the parallel application.
 9. The method of claim 1 wherein each context carries out, through post and advance operations, data communications for the application on data communications resources in the exclusive possession of that context.
 10. The method of claim 1 wherein each context carries out data communications operations independently and in parallel with other contexts. 